Judges: RICHARD P. IEYOUB
Filed Date: 6/30/1995
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Mr. Kemp:
This is in response to your letter of June 2, 1995, transmitting the request of attorney Robert W. Tillery on behalf of the Tangipahoa Water District for an opinion of this office on several different matters. The questions will be addressed verbatim in the order presented, as follows:
(1) Can the Tangipahoa Parish School Boarddonate1
(2) If such a lease is possible, does R.S.
41:981 apply since there is no industrial development board involved?(3) Further, does R.S.
41:716 apply since there is no attempt to sell the property to the Tangipahoa Water District.
It should be noted that questions number (1) and (2) are in conflict, since the former contemplates a donation of property, being a transfer and alienation from the Tangipahoa Parish School Board to the Tangipahoa Water District, while question number (2) contemplates a simple lease arrangement. Our opinion as to question number (1) is that the Tangipahoa Parish School Board may not donate Sixteenth Section property because it lacks legal authority to do so for two basic reasons which will be explained below.
The first reason that the School Board may not alienate Sixteenth Section property is that section 16 in every township within the State has been reserved by Congress for public schools purposes.2
The landmark case of State of Louisiana v. William T. JoyceCompany3
The second reason the School Board may not donate, sell or transfer School Board property to another political entity is that the Constitution generally prohibits such a transfer.
Under the provisions of Article
The Louisiana Supreme Court has interpreted the provisions of Article VII, § 14(A) to mean that a violation occurs whenever the State or a political subdivision seek to give up something of value when under no legal obligation to do so. In Town ofBrusly v. West Baton Rouge Parish Police Jury,
It is notable that in the latter case, the legislature had expressly attempted to impose solidary liability on all members of the fund for unpaid claims, and this was just as explicitly held by the Supreme Court to violate the provisions of Article VII, Section 14(A) of the Constitution. The opinions of this office have consistently followed the holdings of these cases, as in Op. Atty. Gen. No. 78-1260 (October 4, 1978); Op. Atty. Gen. No. 87-587 (September 8, 1987); Op. Atty. Gen. No. 89-180 (April 26, 1989); Op. Atty. Gen. No. 90-392 (January 15, 1991); Op. Atty. Gen. No. 90-73 (April 24, 1990); Op. Atty. Gen. No. 93-681 (November 1, 1993); Op. Atty. Gen. No. 93-717 (November 22, 1993).
However, the School Board might want to consider the possibility of entering into a cooperative endeavor pursuant to Article VII, § 14(C) of the Constitution, authorizing cooperative endeavors for a public purpose. In a number of previous opinions, the Attorney General has construed these provisions to authorize a true cooperative endeavor between governmental entities where the relationship is motivated by a public purpose, yields a public benefit, and the value of the benefit realized is commensurate with the value of the public property utilized or transferred. See, for instance, Op. Atty. Gen. 89-66.
With regard to question number (2), the provisions of R.S.
With respect to question number (3), R.S.
In summary, the Tangipahoa Parish School Board may rely upon either Article VII, § 14(C) to engage in a cooperative endeavor agreement or upon R.S.
We hope this information is of benefit to you and if we may of further assistance, please call upon us.
Very truly yours,
RICHARD P. IEYOUB Attorney General
BY: _________________________ GARY L. KEYSER Assistant Attorney General
RPI/GLK/bb
Honorable Duncan S. Kemp, III District Attorney Twenty-First Judicial District P.O. Drawer 639 Amite, LA 70422-0639
DATE RECEIVED: 6/16/95
DATE RELEASED
GARY L. KEYSER ASST. ATT. GEN.
. . . The mineral rights on property sold by the state shall be reserved, except when the owner or person having the right to redeem buys or redeems property sold or adjudicated to the state for taxes.
unto the Tangipahoa Water District one acre, more or less, of Sixteenth Section property for the purpose of the said Tangipahoa Water District drilling a water well and building a storage tank facility. The time period for the lease is desired to be 99 years and the Tangipahoa Water District would provide a tie-in for 2 adjacent schools (Ponchatoula High School and Vinyard Elementary) in order for those two schools to receive water from the new facility. The Tangipahoa Parish School Board would pay for water received. (Emphasis ours.)